Although it has existed since 2003, BookBlog’s Gender Genie was news to me. Based on the research of Moshe Koppel, Bar-Ilan University in Israel, and Shlomo Argamon, Illinois Institute of Technology, the Gender Genie implements an algorithm that (sometimes) predicts the sex of the author of a piece of text.
I must say, this premise seemed odd to me. I don’t tend to assume that there is some algorithmically determinable masculinity or femininity to any text, but of course, the first thing I tried was pasting in my own writing sample (from a piece of fiction). And the results…correct! “The Gender Genie thinks the author of this passage is: male!” With a “Male Score” of 843 and a “Female Score” of 403, my 663-word passage was apparently way-male.
So what’s the story here? Here’s info from the author of the Gender Genie:
Most of the time, people drop their writing into [The Gender Genie] and, when they don’t get the result they expect, declare it to be wrong, wrong, wrong. Yet, a lot of its users still find it and its analysis to be a fun time waster. Despite having written the program, I didn’t come up with the algorithm and believe that the Genie works no better than the flip of a coin. However, I don’t think it to be a complete time waster since there actually is some academic study that went into it.
In the most basic terms, the computational linguists behind the algorithm, Koppel and Argamon, took a bunch of fiction and looked for trends based on gender. Using complicated formulas, they determined that male writers tended to write more about specific things like an apple, a book, or the car. In contrast, female writers wrote about connections to things like my apple, your book, or our car. The nouns themselves (apple, book, car) didn’t matter much but the preceding qualifier, whether an article (a, an, the) or possessive (my, your, our), did.
Read more about the Gender Genie or try the Gender Genie yourself.
So, women are selfish?
posted by Bassman on 6-25-2007 at 5:36 am
Hmmm… I tried two pieces of writing. The nonfiction piece (a report) clearly judged me as male; the fiction piece (a letter) clearly judged me as female.
I’m a female.
posted by mitbitna on 6-25-2007 at 8:00 am
I tried several articles from news sites, and blogs, all rated male, about 80% were actually female. One even contained the phrase “as a woman myself”, and it was rated male. I think the gender genie is broke, or it guesses male way more often than it should.
posted by Scott on 6-25-2007 at 8:12 am
I had equally disappointing results. I actually tried several pieces, all my own, three each of fiction and non-fiction. The non-fiction came up male each time, and the fiction popped up female. Am I only a chick when I write fiction? Is my masculinity released through factual musings? Bizarre.
posted by natlynn on 6-25-2007 at 5:30 pm
Check out the ‘read more’ link above for the author’s comments on the Genie Gender (I believe the author is a woman). She makes interesting points about the Genie and how our society may have generalized on a certain style of writing — which the Genie identifies as “male” — regardless of the actual gender of the writer. I think it’s an interesting comment on writing style that:
a) There is a measurable maleness or femaleness to the language used. (Or at least an assignment of two styles to two genders.)
AND
b) Women often write using the measurably “male” style (and perhaps vice versa).
One could read this as a statement on patriarchy, or as a hopeful statement that the gender of the writer is not relevant to the final product — that the writer has that choice when writing. I think that’s pretty cool.
posted by Higgins on 6-25-2007 at 5:57 pm